SquidLad wrote: » Well, I was 13. And your tastes change over time. Like I was definitely able to identify some of the really bad stuff but I was just happy to have any live wrestling to go to. It's why I'm trying to emphasize the "not as good as you remember" point. IWW, like the Attitude Era was cool at the time but has aged horribly and I don't necessarily think it would make for the best footage on OTT on demand.
leggo wrote: » Right, well I’m not gonna tell a small business owner who’s doing really well what they should or shouldn’t do with their business. Someone asked about the old IWW footage, I answered and said it’d be cool if other promotions from today gave their footage to OTT to get extra exposure, but unrealistic in reality. My point about IWW was always that they were important and, while it became cool to stick the boot in, they don’t get the credit they deserve because without them and the other young promotions that blazed a trail...you don’t get the great situation we have today. I really don’t understand what your issue is though. You say yourself you were happy to have indie wrestling to go to back then. You’re ****ting on lads’ work from 13 years ago while they were inexperienced...why exactly?! Because you’re concerned about your critical reputation as SquidLad and don’t wanna be seen as ‘going easy on them’?
leggo wrote: » I’m kinda over this debate, I just think it’s ridiculous to slate inexperienced people as bad and discredit a whole product because there were some elements that weren’t up to scratch with a world that’s grown and evolved massively in the years since. It’s kinda like going to an LOI match and giving out because they’re not as good as Messi, you’re judging them at a grade they’re not at and that’s something you knew making that judgement. So it just sounds like you just want to call something bad.
leggo wrote: » Actually people can use context to judge something and I gave you an example (the LOI) in the post you quoted. Same reason if I went to the cinema and saw Avengers and it was awful, I’d be pretty angry: they have great actors, a crazy budget, a big studio behind them giving them every resources to put forth a great movies. If I stuck on True Movies at 2am or went to see an arthouse indie movie made on a shoestring, I wouldn’t go online going mental about how the script was a bit naff or the actors weren’t Oscar-worthy. What did I expect?! Yet you seem to be oblivious to the idea of context. In comparing IWW to OTT, you’re essentially comparing Power Rangers to Sopranos. One was a smaller kids show using young actors to give children something to watch, the other is a show aimed at adults, bankrolled by HBO using veteran actors. And your exact situation is pretty much apeing that comparison: “I watched Power Rangers as a child but rewatched it there and the acting is awful compared to shows I like today!” Yeah. You’ve grown up. You’re watching products for grown ups now with people more experienced to give older people what they’re looking for. Of course it’s better. But to do a Sopranos people have to go through a show like Power Rangers to learn their trade. You seem to be the only person struggling with this very simple concept.
leggo wrote: » You’re saying you’re judging it on its own merits but then comparing it to ROH because...halls? No, they’re completely different companies, the only thing they had in common was “not WWE”! ROH then would be more like an OTT: a super-indie who ran regular spot shows aimed at adults who’ll travel bringing in name talent from feeder promotions then selling that on DVD (since they were owned originally by RF Video). IWW tried that with their first couple shows then shifted to become a local feeder promotion, more comparable to Fight Factory, in growing their own talent and using imports on bigger shows to help build them, then selling by touring the main roster for family shows. If you’re going to judge them on their merits, judge them on that, because that’s their merit, I was there like. If someone compared OTT and Fight Factory today they’d be rightly ridiculed because it’s two completely different companies with different sets of objectives. And on that merit they were extremely successful and massively overachieved, to the point you now compare them to ROH (even unfavourably) when they should’ve had no right to be! You don’t have to like them, it’s totally your prerogative to have your own taste. But to say they were bad is just false and only highlights your own misunderstanding. If a person is new in a job, are they a bad worker or just new? If a feeder company explodes and runs national tours and a TV show before they’re ready...are they bad or overachieving? We made you believe we were in the same ballpark as ROH when we were all going broke trying to make it work like!
Omackeral wrote: » That was a solid feud lads, a real 60 minute Broadway. Well done to both of you!
SquidLad wrote: » The angle where Darren banned me from the IWW forum to set the match up was great too.
leggo wrote: » There it is! I knew there'd be something, there's always something! Class twist. :pac:
B.A._Baracus wrote: » If anyone wants to continue talking about old Irish shows what about those fake wwe tribute shows. Bad. So bad :pac: Some old Welsh guy with fake tan sprayed all over him pretending to be the rock with an eyebrow painted on him to boot :pac:
weareallmarks wrote: » And you wonder why you where banned multiple times from the iww forum squidward?????
beakerjoe wrote: » Ah the posters looked so bad, even Kain (think thats how he was spelt) didnt look convincing.
Sirsok wrote: » I have an old gym wars dvd somewhere that I was involved in, was a rumble. Horrendous stuff lookimg back! They named me Shane The Brusiser, I think it was during a period that Ballymun Bruiser left the company and they wanted to get back at him. I remember wrestling at a show, where there was only four wrestlers on the thing. Mandrake, Conor Hurley and what went onto be Bobby George Jnr under the name of Rob Cage. They called it the King Of Yaughal cup. Consisted of two semi finals, Me and Mandrake, Connor and Rob Cage, in the semis, then intermission, then the final which included am interference withich then lead to a tag match. Was my last match for the company!